Colin Kaepernick's decision to not stand for the national anthem is re-igniting debate about the anthem's author. A school is named for Francis Scott Key in San Francisco, and now the school district is re-considering that name and others.

A resolution will be introduced later this month and judging from the overheated rhetoric I received on Twitter including comments like, "This is just trying to erase history" and others saying this is "long overdue," this is a touchy subject.

Students at Francis Scott Key Elementary in the city's Sunset District may not know the man who penned the Star Spangled Banner also owned slaves, but San Francisco School Board President Matt Haney does and says it's time to consider a name change.

One of the murals inside SF George Washington High. He owned slaves so should the school name be changed? pic.twitter.com/Ca6N1LKois

"Our school name communicates something to our kids," he said. "It says something about who we want them to be, what we value, so it's important."

Also on Haney's list are Jefferson Elementary and George Washington High, where a large statue of the first president stands. He too was a slave owner, but ninth grader Katelen Rivas and her dad Rob say leave the name alone.

"That's, like, in the past," she said.

Her dad added, "We've been using that name for a very long time, it's been working, just leave it."